Tweets sent in Turkey are up 138% on Friday a day after the country’s Twitter ban, according to data published Friday by Brandwatch, a firm that analyzes social-media analytics. The data, which took a sample set of geolocated tweets over a two-hour period, underscored how the ban appears to be backfiring.

Hundreds of thousand of Turks, who have become accustomed to broadening Internet censorship on recent years, have also used private networks and programs to circumvent the ban. It was enacted hours after Erdogan threatened at a public rally to eradicate or “root out Twitter.”

Analysts say the ban was aimed at preventing the publication of recordings of alleged telephone conversations between Erdogan, Turkish officials and media bosses, revealing the scope of government intervention into all spheres of life and suggesting widespread high-level corruption, prior to critical local elections March 30. Such recordings have been anonymously published on social media almost daily.

“Political satire has always been very strong in Turkey, especially during times of high political polarization and in the 1970s. Now it’s back after the wall of fear has been surmounted,” said Sinan Ulgen, a former Turkish diplomat now with the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. Even five years ago, he said, Turks were more wary of expressing criticism against the government in any way, including humor. “The purpose of satirical tweets is to spread political messages with a more understandable, popular and striking way,” Ulgen said.

Erdogan, who has sued scores of citizens and caricaturists over the years for making fun of him, wasn’t available for comment Friday over the Twitter closure.

While Turkish researchers suggest that only a small percentage of supporters of the ruling AKP party regularly use the Internet, some young AKP supporters approve of restrictions, saying they feel personally insulted by harsh criticism against the government.

“Those who oppose the government are going over the top on Internet,” said Ismail Taki, 27, a hairdresser in Istanbul who said he will vote for the AKP, defending the government’s right to restrict Internet use and even ban social-media websites.”Too much of anything is bad. It shouldn’t be left up to the people.”